67 Fakih with DePass Mapping the Economic Landscape: Immigrant, Visible Minority & Indigenous Women in the Canadian Workplace (A Selected Bibliography of Media and Support Resources, 1980s-2008, Part 1) Sana Fakih with Cecille DePass Search terms used: immigrant, woman, visible, minority, workplace, workforce, employment, Canada, discrimination, stereotypes, wages, Aboriginal, First Nations, refugee. This selected bibliography1, concentrates mainly, on some key Canadian films and other media resources. It concentrates on systemic issues which racialized immigrant, and Indigenous women usually encounter, when searching for meaningful paid, employment in the high education segment of the Canadian workplace. There are a sizeable number of resources available on issues of immigrants, racialized, and Indigenous people in Canada. However, in Part One, of this two part, bibliography, only, media and additional print resources which are most relevant to the employment issues encountered by such marginalized women, have been identified, and then selected carefully, for consideration and inclusion in this online document. In contemporary Canada, the issues and factors that affect the employment opportunities and working conditions of marginalized women are difficult to untangle. They are intertwined, in highly fractured and fragmented multiple layers. The layers themselves converge, in order to, form a complex kaleidoscope. Like a kaleidoscope, subtle shifts, twist and turns in structural and systemic public policies, are enacted and enforced by members of the dominant groups and their representatives. The enactment of policies which impact marginalized groups, reveal a wide range of different manifestations. Invariably, such manifestations, usually, have negative impacts on marginal groups. Some of the impacts are so devastating and embedded in one’s body and soul, that over generations, the legacy of the colonizers’ brands/marks are either subtly, or blatantly visible and evident. In Canada, the clusters of factors underpinning the colonial brands/marks also vary. For immigrants, for example, they range from macro-level institutional issues, such as, tri-level government policies, language acquisition programs, and recognition of professional credentials; to deeply rooted, taken for granted, power strains which relate to social and economic status, social acceptance and rejection (egs. of the latter include, structural racism and discrimination); through to presences/absences of different types of community support, and finally to, historical, socio-cultural, and largely ascribed, gender roles. The resources listed in this bibliography have been selected for the general Canadian public who know very little, if anything, about the contemporary, every day, working lives of visible minority, immigrant and Indigenous women. The themes selected for inclusion in the documentaries, accordingly, spotlight either one or more of the issues and factors identified above, as the overarching story lines in the documentaries. 1 The bibliography was prepared by the principal author, Sana Fakih, with some strategic input from Cecille DePass, regarding for example, the final Introductory section, and also, inclusion of a few documents and research studies which were related to her doctoral dissertation, and follow-up research. The bibliography is intended for use by researchers and progressive educators who are interested in exploring employment issues encountered by minority women in the Canadian workplace. Cultural and Pedagogical Inquiry, 2015, 7(2), pp. 67-82 ISSN 1916-3460 © 2015 University of Alberta http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/cpi/index Selected Bibliography 68 The resultant bibliography is, in effect a public education, teaching tool. As a valuable resource list, it provides holistic views of the history, challenges, dilemmas, triumphs, strategies and possible solutions which are relevant to immigrant, racialized, and Indigenous women who navigate the realms of employment in Canada. In viewing the media resources with critical eyes, the complexity of underlying systemic and structural factors are revealed with clarity. In addition to the perspectives of women who are seeking employment themselves, some of the selected films also show the perspectives of second generation youth (i.e. adult children of immigrant women); or depict stories of entire families, thus capturing the landscape concerning how an individual woman’s integration into the Canadian workforce affects not only herself, but the entire family unit. Integration of each woman/wife with her spouse, and her children, is an issue of great importance to the larger Canadian society. Within this context, it is therefore, unfortunate to note that most of the films that look directly at immigrant, racialized and Indigenous women’s perspectives on employment issues were made in the 1980’s or early 1990’s, (in other words, generally, around the time of the introduction, in 1986, of the federal government’s Employment Equity Act. (See listing of important Royal Commission reports, in Section three, for full references). Since then, production of such documentaries, largely funded by the Women’s Unit of the National Film Board of Canada, have dwindled considerably, in importance. The employment issues, being largely systemic in nature, have not disappeared since the 1980s. At present, women’s employment opportunities, viewed from new perspectives, namely the perspectives and experiences in the paid workplace, of a younger generation require exploration. Second generation perspectives and lived experiences, of either, younger immigrant women, or, of second generation immigrant women who have been raised and educated in Canada, need to be properly documented, and accordingly, addressed by employers in the public, private and corporate sectors. This is an important issue, because of the proliferation at international, national and regional levels, of a number of policies in: human rights, multiculturalism, diversity, anti-racism, anti-discrimination, and zero tolerance, which give the misleading impression to members of the younger generation that all such troubling issues have been solved. However, since minority employment matters are predominantly, structural in nature, they remain as troubling, unresolved, perennial issues. If they remain hidden and unaddressed, they are likely to have long-term negative impacts on future generations, and on the larger Canadian society. The bibliography of media resources, also includes another category of information, specifically, a list of significant federal government research reports, as well as a very small sample of published, and unpublished, dissertations and theses, published articles, and conference proceedings, written by Canadian scholars and authors that relate to the issues immigrant, racialized, and Indigenous people face in the realms of employment in Canada. There is a growing body of literature in the public domain, which emphasizes the roles of human agency, advocacy, and activism. Accordingly, on the one hand, there is the importance of remaining vigilant, and of continuously working for the rights of marginalized women. As importantly, on the other hand, there is the accompanying need to document remarkable cases of resilience, successes and triumphs, often despite the odds. This bibliography, published in CPI, makes a small contribution, to such an important endeavour. Cultural and Pedagogical Inquiry, 2015, 7(2), pp. 67-82 ISSN 1916-3460 © 2015 University of Alberta http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/cpi/index 69 Fakih with DePass Organization of bibliography: The bibliography begins with a list of films in alphabetical order, according to titles. Titles marked with an asterisk (*) indicate that the film was viewed by the principal researcher, Sana Fakih. Whereas, titles with a double asterisk (**) indicate resources with which Cecille DePass has been either, closely associated, or produced, often in collaboration with other like-minded researchers. In addition, several other important resources are identified which illustrate explicitly or implicitly, employment experiences of racialized immigrants (primarily, from the Global South), and Indigenous people. The original listing of media resources (a far smaller version), identified some of the resources which were created between the 1980s-2008. This project was for the Alberta Network of Immigrant Women (ANIW, in summer 2008). By a coincidence, and even more importantly, 2008 marked, the first time in which the federal government issued a public apology for the treatment of Indigenous children in Residential Schools. The 2015 Bibliography consists of several sections: (i) Films and documentaries, understandably, the largest category, (ii) Selected Print Resources, (iii) Significant federal government documents, and Royal Commission Reports, and (iv) a very small sample of unpublished dissertations and theses, primarily from the University of Calgary. Finally, specific terms: racialized persons or groups, indigenous peoples, and visible minorities are defined, using reputable sources. SECTION ONE: SELECTED FILMS 9 Months, 6 Blocks* Directed by: Christopher Romeike Produced by: Leslie Thomas, Peter Starr Production Agency: Mastice Productions Inc. and National Film Board of Canada 2005, 28 min 36 s This documentary follows the lives of three residents who live in the diverse inner-city community of South Parkdale in Toronto. One of the characters
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